Post on 08-Jan-2016
description
Critical Access Hospitals (CAH)
What every CAH needs to know about the Conditions of Participation 2011
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Part 3 of 3
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Speaker
Sue Dill Calloway RN, Esq. CPHRM
AD, BA, BSN, MSN, JDPresident5447 Fawnbrook LaneDublin, Ohio 43017614 791-1468sdill1@columbus.rr.com
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Medical Records 300
Must maintain clinical medical records system in accordance with P&Ps,Must have a system of patient records, ways to identify the author and protect security of MR,Must be sure MR are not lost, stolen, or altered or reproduced in authorized manner,Limit access to only those authorized persons,
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Medical Records 300
Must have current list of authenticates signatures (like signature cards),
And computer codes and signature stamps,
Must be adequately protected and authorized by governing body,
Must cross reference inpatients and outpatients,
If transfer to swing bed can use one MR but need divider,
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Medical Record
Both inpatient and swing bed must have MR;admission, discharge orders, progress notes, nursing notes, graphics, laboratory support documents, any other pertinent documents, and discharge summaries, Must retain MR and file them,
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Medical Records 300
Must have system to be able to pull any old MR within past 6 years,
24 hours a day and 7 days a week,Inpatient or outpatient,Surveyor will verify there is a MR for every patient,Will look to be stored in place protected from
damage, flood, fire, theft, etc.,Must protect confidentiality of MR,MR must be adequately staffed,
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Medical Records 302
Must be legible, complete, accurate, readily accessible and systematically organized,
To ensure accurate and complete documentation of all orders, test results, evaluations, treatments, interventions, care provided and the patient’s response to those treatments, interventions and care.
Must have director of MR that has been appointed by governing board (303),
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Medical Records 303
MR must contain: Identification and social data, Evidence of properly executed informed consent
forms, Pertinent medical history, Assessment of the health status and health care
needs of the patient, Brief summary of the episode, disposition, and
instructions to the patient;
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Informed Consent 304
Include evidence of properly executed informed consent forms for any procedures or surgical procedures,
Specified by the medical staff, Or by Federal or State law, if applicable, that
require written patient consent, Informed consent means the patient or patient
representative is given the information, explanations, consequences, and options needed in order to consent to a procedure or treatment.
See also tag 321,
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Consider List of Procedures
Procedure Name Requires Informed Consent Ablations YesAmniocentesis YesAngiogram YesAngiography YesAngioplasties YesArthrogram YesArterial Line insertion (performed alone) YesAspiration Cyst (simple/minor) No
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Consider List of Procedures Cont.
Aspiration Cyst (complex) YesBlood Administration YesBlood Patch YesBone Marrow Aspiration YesBone Marrow Biopsy YesBronchoscopy YesCapsule Endoscopy YesCatherizations, Cardiac & vascular YesCardioversion Yes
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Informed Consent 304
A properly executed consent form contains at least the following:
Name of patient, and when appropriate,
patient’s legal guardian; Name of CAH; Name of procedure(s); Name of practitioner(s) performing the
procedures(s); Signature of patient or legal guardian;
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Consent Form Must Include
Date and time consent is obtained; Statement that procedure was explained
to patient or guardian; Signature of professional person
witnessing the consent; Name/signature of person who explained
the procedure to the patient or guardian.
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Medical Records 304
MR must contain information such as progress and nursing notes, medical hx., documentation, records, reports, recordings, test results, assessments etc. to:
• Justify admission;
• Describe the patient’s progress; and support the diagnosis;
• Describe the patient’s response to medications; and
• Describe the patient’s response to services such as interventions, care, treatments,
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Medical Records
Must maintain confidentiality of records,What precautions are taken to ensure confidentiality and prevent unauthorized persons from gaining access,MR retention period is 6 years and longer if required by state (311),When can records be removed ?AHIMA has practice briefs that can be helpful to hospitals at www.ahima.org,
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Discharge Summary 304
A discharge summary discusses: The outcome of the CAH stay, The disposition of the patient, And provisions for follow-up care (any
post appointments such as home health, hospice, assisted living, LTC, swing bed services,
Is required for all hospitals stays and prior to and after swing bed admission,
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Discharge Summary 304
Admitting practitioner must do,MD/DO may delegate writing the discharge
summary to other qualified health care personnel such as nurse practitioners and physician assistants if state allows,
Surveyor will verify MS have specified which procedures or treatments need informed consent,
Surveyor will verify consent forms contain all the elements,
Will do review of closed and open MR-at least 10% of average daily census,
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History and Physicals 305
All or part of H&P must be delegated to other practitioners if allowed by state law and CAH (see also tag 320),
However MD/DO assume full responsibility,MD/DO must sign also,Surveyor will look at bylaws to determine
when H&P must be done,Make sure H&P on chart before patient goes
to surgery unless an emergencyImportant issue with CMS and TJC
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Response to Treatment 306
The following must describe the patient’s response to treatment; All orders, Reports of treatment and medications, Nursing notes, Documentation of complications, Other information used to monitor the
patients such as progress notes, lab tests, graphics,
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Medical Records 306
Must make sure MR get filed promptly,All MR must contain all lab reports,Radiology reports,All vital signs,All reports of treatment include
complications and hospital acquired infections,
All unfavorable reaction to drugs,
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Entries in the MR 307
Only those specified in the MS P&P can write in the MR,
All entries must be DATED, TIMED, and authenticated (must sign off each order),
If rubber stamps used-person must sign they will be the only one who uses it,
Must have sanctions for improper use of stamp, computer key or code signature,
Must date and time when a verbal order is signed off,
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Confidentiality of MR 308
Must maintain confidentiality of information,Access to information limited to those who
need to know,Safeguard MR, videos, audio,Will verify only authorized people can
access MR contained in MR department (which many call Health Information Management),
Need to release only with written authorization of patient or authorized representative,
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MR Policies 309
Need written P&P that govern the use and removal of MR,
To include the conditions of release of information,
Remember the federal HIPAA law on MR confidentiality and privacy and ARRA, HITECH, and breach notification law,
Written consent of patient required to release (310),
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Retention of MR 311
Records are retained for at least 6 years from date of last entry,
And longer if required by State or federal law (OSHA, FDA, EPA),
or if the records may be needed in any pending proceeding,
Can be in hard copy, microfilm or computer memory banks,
AHIMA has practice brief on retention periods,
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Surgical Procedures 320
Be performed in a safe manner,By qualified practitioner with clinical
privileges,What does safe manner mean?The equipment and supplies are sufficient
so the type of surgery can be performed safely,
Surgery dept must be organized and staffed if you have one,
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Surgical Services 320
Must follow state and federal laws, Must follow standards of practice and
recommendations by national recognized organizations (AMA, ACOS, APIC, AORN),
Quality of outpatient surgical services must be consistent with inpatient,
Scope of surgical services must be writing and approved by MS,
OR must be supervised by experienced staff member, address qualifications of supervisor of OR rooms in P&P,
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Surgical Procedures 320
If LPN or OR tech used as scrub nurses then must be under RN who is immediately available to physically intervene,
There are also a number of policies and procedures that need to be in place.
AORN Perioperative Standards and Recommended Practices have many resources to help meet CMS and TJC requirements
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Surgery Policies 320
Aseptic surveillance and practice, including scrub techniques
Identification of infected and non-infected cases Housekeeping requirements/procedures Patient care requirements
Preoperative work-up Patient consents and releases Clinical procedures Safety practices Patient identification procedures
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Surgery Policies 320
Duties of scrub and circulating nurse, Safety practices, The requirement to conduct surgical counts in
accordance with accepted standards of practice, Scheduling of patients for surgery, Personnel policies unique to the OR, Resuscitative techniques, DNR status, Care of surgical specimens, Malignant hyperthermia,
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Surgery Policies 320
Appropriate protocols for all surgical procedures performed. These may be procedure-specific or general in nature and will include a list of equipment, materials, and supplies necessary to properly carry out job assignments.
Sterilization and disinfection procedures Acceptable operating room attire Handling infections and biomedical/medical
waste
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H&P 320
Complete H&P must be done in accordance with acceptable standards of practice,
All or part may be delegated to other practitioners (like PA or NP) if allowed by your state law and CAH,
Surgeon must sign and assumes full responsibility,
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H&P 320
Need to have H&P on the chart PRIOR to surgery,
An exception is an emergency and then need brief admission note on chart,
Note should include at a minimum critical information about the patient’s condition including pulmonary status, cardiovascular status, BP, vital signs, etc.
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Informed Consent 320
This includes all inpatient and outpatient,Is informed of who will actually perform
the surgery (no ghost surgery),Must inform patient if practitioner other
than the primary surgeon will perform important parts of the surgical procedure,
EVEN if it is under the primary surgeon’s supervision,
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Informed Consent 320
Consent must include:Name of patient or their legal guardian,Name of hospital (CAH),Name of specific procedure,Name of person doing the procedure or important parts of the procedure other than primary surgeon,Significant surgical tasks include: opening and closing, harvesting grafts, dissecting tissue, removing tissue, implanting devices and altering tissue,Continued on next page, See tag 302 also,
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Informed Consent 320
Nature and purpose of proposed treatment, Risks, consequences if no treatment is rendered, alternative procedures or treatments, probability that proposed procedure would be successful
Signature of patient or guardian,Date and time consent obtained,Statement that procedure explained to the patient or
guardian,Signature of professional person witnessing the
consent (proposal to change to only witness and they are witness to signature only),
Name of person who explained procedure,
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Informed Consent 320
Must disclose information to patient necessary to make a decision,
It is a process and not a form,Authorization form signed by a patient who
does not understand what he is signing is not informed consent,
Given in language patient can understand (interpreter and issue of health care literacy),
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PACU 320
Must be adequate provisions for immediate post-op care,
Must be in accordance with acceptable standards of care (ASPAN),
Separate room with limited access,P&P specify transfer requirements to and from
PACU,PACU assessment includes level of activity,
respiration, BP, LOC, patient color (aldrete),If no PACU close observation by RN in patient’s
room,
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OR Register 320
Register will include; Patient’s name, id number, Date of surgery, Total time of surgery, Name of surgeons, nursing personnel,
anesthesiologist, Type of anesthesia, Operative findings, preop and post-op
diagnosis, age of patient,
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Operative Report Must Include 320
Name and id of patient,Date and time of surgery,Name of surgeons, assistants,Pre-op and post-op dx,Name of procedure,Type of anesthesia,Complications and description of techniques and tissue removed,Grafts, tissue, devises implanted,Name and description of significant surgical tasks done by others (see list-opening, closing, harvesting grafts,
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Surveyor in OR 320
Will verify access to OR and PACU is limited,
That there is appropriate cleaning between surgical cases and appropriate terminal cleaning applied;
That operating room attire is suitable for the kind of surgical case performed,
that persons working in the operating suite must wear only clean surgical costumes,
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Surveyor in OR 320
That equipment is available for rapid and routine sterilization of OR materials,
that equipment is monitored, inspected, tested, and maintained by the CAH’S biomedical equipment program,
sterilized materials are packaged, handled, labeled, and stored in a manner that ensures sterility e.g., in a moisture and dust controlled environment,
P&P on expiration dates is followed,
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Surveyor in OR 320
OR organizational chart show lines of authority and delegation within the dept,
Make sure have the following: On-call system, Cardiac monitor, Resuscitator, Defibrillator, Aspirator
(suction equipment), Tracheotomy set (a cricothyroidotomy set
is not a substitute),
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Surgical Privileges 321
Must designate who are allowed to perform surgery,
Must conform to P&Ps, must be within scope of practice laws,Review the list of physician privileges to
determine if current,
Surgical privileges updated every 2 years,Are procedures performed by appropriate
physicians,
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Surgical Privileges 321
Surgery service must maintain roster specifying the surgical privilege,
Current list of surgeons suspended must also be retained,
MS bylaws must have criteria for determining privileges,
Surveyor will review written assessment of the practitioner's training, experience, health status, and performance.
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Surgical Privileges 321
Surgical privileges are granted in accordance with the competence of each,
MS appraisal procedure must evaluate each practitioner’s training, education, experience, and competence,
As established by the QI program, credentialing, adherence to hospital P&P, and laws,
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Surgical Privileges 321
Must specify for each practitioner that performs surgical tasks including MD, DO, dentists, oral surgeon, podiatrists,
RNFA, NP, surgical PA, surgical tech et. al.,Must be based on compliance with what
they are allowed to do under state law,If task requires it to be under supervision of
MD/DO this means supervising doctor is present in the same room working with the patient,
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Pre-Anesthesia Assessment 322
Pre-anesthesia evaluation must be performed immediately prior to the surgery,
By qualified person to administer anesthetic to evaluate risk of anesthesia,
Must include; notation of risk of anesthesia, anesthesia, drug, and allergy history,
Potential anesthesia problems id,Patient’s condition prior to induction,
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Pre-anesthesia ASA Guideline
Preanesthesia Evaluation 1
Patient interview to assess Medical history, Anesthetic history, Medication history
Appropriate physical examinationReview of objective diagnostic data (e.g., laboratory,
ECG, X-ray)
Assignment of ASA physical status
Formulation of the anesthetic plan and discussion of the risks and benefits of the plan with the patient or the patient’s legal representative
1 www.asahq.org/publicationsAndServices/standards/03.pdf
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Post Anesthesia Evaluation 321
Post-anesthesia follow-up report must be written on all inpatients and outpatients prior to discharge,
Written by the individual who is qualified to administer the anesthesia.
Must include at a minimum: Cardiopulmonary status, LOC, follow-up care and/or observations; and,
Any complications occurring during PACU.
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Post Anesthesia ASA Guidelines
Patient evaluation on admission and discharge from the postanesthesia care unit
A time-based record of vital signs and level of consciousness
A time-based record of drugs administered, their dosage and route of administration
Type and amounts of intravenous fluids administered, including blood and blood products
Any unusual events including post-anesthesia or post procedural complications
Post-anesthesia visits
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American Association of Nurse Anesthetists
AANA has excellent website1
Information on how to become a CRNA
Has position statement on documenting the standard of care for the anesthesia record
Sample forms
1www.aana.com/resources.aspx?ucNavMenu_TSMenuTargetID=51&ucNavMenu_TSMenuTargetType=4&ucNavMenu_TSMenuID=6&id=713
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Anesthesia 323
CAH must designate who can administer anesthesia,
MS include criteria for determining privileges, In accordance with P&P and scope of practice and state law,
Only by anesthesiologist, MD/DO, CRNA, anesthesiology assistant, supervised trainee in education program, dentist, podiatrist,
State exemption process of MD supervision for CRNA,
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Anesthesia 323
A CRNA may administer anesthesia when under the supervision of the operating practitioner or of an anesthesiologist who is immediately available if needed,
An anesthesiologist’s assistant (AA) may administer anesthesia when under the supervision of an anesthesiologist who is immediately available if needed.
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Immediately Available Means
Physically located within the OR or in the L&D unit;
and Is prepared to immediately conduct hands-on intervention if needed;
and Is not engaged in activities that could prevent the supervising practitioner from being able to immediately intervene and conduct hands-on interventions if needed
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Discharge 325
All patients are discharged in the company of a responsible adult,
Any exceptions to this requirement must be made by the attending practitioner and documented in the medical record,
Surveyor will verify that the CAH has P&Ps in place to govern discharge procedures and instructions,
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Quality Assurance 331
Must periodically review total program (will look at who is to do this),
At least once per year,Include services provided and number of
patients served, look at volume of service (332),Include at least 10% of charts- active and
closed charts (333),
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Quality Assurance 335
Review all P&Ps also (show evidence of how these are evaluated and reviewed),
Purpose of the evaluation is to determine whether the utilization of services was appropriate,
And whether the P&P we revised if needed,
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Quality Assurance 336
An effective program includes;Ongoing monitoring and data collection,Problem prevention, id and analysis,Id of corrective actions,Implementation of corrective actions,Evaluation of corrective actions,Measures to improve quality on a continuous
basis,
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Quality Assurance 336
QA program to evaluate appropriateness of diagnosis and treatment and in treatment outcomes,
Facility wide QA program (QI),Can have QA by arrangement, Surveyor will look at your QI PLAN, QI minutes,
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Healthcare Associated Infections 337
Must evaluate nosocomial infections,Must look at medication therapies,Must evaluate the quality of care of LIPs (NP, PA,
CNS) by doctor on MS or under contract,Will look at how their performance is evaluated
(339),Quality of care and appropriateness of dx and tx
by doctors must be reviewed by QIO (PRO), hospital that is member of network, or as identified in state rural health plan (340),
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Quality Improvement 341
Staff consider the findings and evaluations and recommendations of the evaluations and take corrective actions,
Take steps to remedial action to address deficiencies found thru QI process,
Will look to see who is responsible for implementing actions,
Document the outcomes of all remedial actions (343)
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Organ, Tissue, and Eye 344
Hospital must have written P&P to address its organ procurement,
must have agreement with OPO,Must timely notify OPO if death is imminent or has
patient has died,OPO to determine medical suitability for organ
donation,Defines what must be in your written agreement
(definitions, criteria for referral, access to your death record information
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Organ, Tissue, and Eye 345
Board must approve your organ procurement policy,
Must integrate into hospital’s QAPI program,Surveyor will review written agreement with the
OPO to make sure it has all the required information (42 CFR Part 486),
Check off the long list to ensure all elements are present (such as definition of imminent death, what is timely notification, allows them access to your death records etc.,
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Imminent Death 345
Definition of imminent death might include a patient with severe, acute brain injury who: Requires mechanical ventilation (due to brain injury); Is in an ICU or ED; AND Has clinical findings consistent with a Glascow Coma Score
that is less than or equal to a mutually-agreed-upon threshold; or MD/DOs are evaluating a diagnosis of brain death (within 1
hour) ; or An MD/DO has ordered that life sustaining therapies be withdrawn, pursuant to the family’s decision (notify them before withdrawing life sustaining therapies),Make sure your staff is aware of the P&P,
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Tissue and Eye Bank 346
Need an agreement with at least one tissue and eye bank,
OPO is gatekeeper and notifies the tissue or eye bank chosen by the hospital,
OPO determines medical suitability,Don’t need separate agreement with tissue
bank if agreement with OPO to provide tissue and eye procurement,
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Family Notification 347
Once OPO has selected a potential donor, person’s family must be informed of the donor’s family’s option,
OPO and hospital will decide how and by whom the family will be approached,
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Organ Donation 347
Person to initiate request must be a designated requestor or organized representative of tissue or eye bank,
Designated requestor must have completed course approved by OPO,
Encourage discretion and sensitivity to the circumstances, views and beliefs of the families (348),
Surveyor will review complaint file for relevant complaints,
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Organ Donation Training 349
Patient care staff must be trained on organ donation issues,
Training program at a minimum should include: consent process, importance of discretion, role of designated requestor, transplantation and donation, QI, and role of OPO,
Train all new employees, when change in P&P, and when problems identified in QAPI process,
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Organ Donation 349
Hospital must cooperate with OPO to review death records to improve id of potential donors,
Surveyor will verify P&P that hospital works with OPO,
Maintain potential donors while necessary testing and placement of donated organs take place,
Must have P&P to maintain viability of organs,
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Organ Transplantation
Hospital in which organ transplants are performed must be member of OPTN-Organ Procurement and Transplantation Network,
Must abide by its rules-42 USC 274, section 372 of the Public Health Service Act,
Must provide data to OPTN, Scientific Registry and OPO,
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Swing Beds LTC Services 350-408
Must meet following to provide post-hospital SNF care (350),
Must be certified by CMS,
SNF services must be in compliance with Subpart B of part 483,
Allows CAH to use beds interchangeable for either acute care or SNF level,
Swings from acute care reimbursement to SNF services and reimbursement,
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Swing Beds
Must be discharge orders from acute care, progress notes and discharge summary and subsequent admission orders,
If patient does not change facilities can use same MR with chart separator,
Medicare requires 3 day qualifying stay in CAH prior to admission to swing bed,
3 day rule only applies to Medicare patients,
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Swing Beds
No LOS restriction for swing bed,No transfer agreement needed
between CAH and nursing home,CAH does not have to use the MDS
form for recording patient assessment,Swing bed patients receive SNF level
of care and CAH is reimbursed for SNF level.
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Swing Beds-Requirements
Resident rights,Admission, transfer, and discharge
rights,Resident behavior and family practices
(restraints),Patient activities,Social services, comprehensive
assessment, dental services, and nutrition,
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Eligibility 351
Must be certified as CAH,Have no more than 25 beds,Section on facilities participating as
rural health care hospital (see 352),Have to be in compliance with SNF
requirements in subpart B of part 483, (residents rights, nutrition, dental, admission and discharge rights, patient activities, social services, comprehensive assessment etc.,
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Resident Rights 361
Right to dignified existence,Self determination,Communicate and access to
persons and services outside the facility,
Right to a copy of a notice of their rights,
In language they can understand,Right to refuse treatment,
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Resident Rights 361
Right to get access to their records within 24 hours (excluding weekends/holidays),
A right to buy a copy of their medical records with 2 working days notice,
Rights in writing about their conduct and responsibilities during their stay,
Facility must assure patient’s rights are followed,
Right to know what their rights are,
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Resident Rights 361
Right to choose attending MD,Right to share room with their spouse,Participate in their plan of care,Right to privacy and confidentiality,Right to get mail and send mail unopened,Right to personal property and visitors,Work or not work,Provide interpreters, sign language when
needed,
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Resident Rights 362
Right to refuse treatment, Right to refuse to participate in
experimental research,A resident being considered for
participation in experimental research must be fully informed of the nature of the experiment and understand the possible consequences of participating,
Will look to see if IRB has approved experimental treatment,
Right to make an advance directive,
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Resident Rights 363
Inform each Medicaid patient that items and services that will be included and for which the resident will be charged and amount,
If M/M does not make payment for service, must notify the resident of what is not covered,
May charge for phone, TV, radio, personal clothing, confections, flowers, plants, private room unless isolation, social events, books etc.,
Must have P&P for advance directives, educate your staff on advance directives,
Must document in the MR if they have one, Provide for community education on advance
directives (can use videotapes and audiotapes),
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Free Choice 364
Right to choose an attending MD/DO,But doctor must fulfill given
requirements such as the frequency of visits,
Facility has right to inform resident to seek another doctor,
Facility must help patient to find another physician,
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Consent 365
Right to be fully informed in advance about care and treatment,
Including any changes, They have right to receive information in order to
make healthcare decisions, information should include medical condition,
changes in condition, the benefits, reasonable risks of the recommended treatment, and reasonable alternatives,
Financial costs to treatment options must be disclosed in advance and in writing,
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Privacy/Confidentiality 367
Right to personal privacy,Right to confidentiality,Privacy to written and telephone calls,Right to privacy for visits in office, dining
room, vacant chapel,Privacy when using bathroom,Staff should pull curtains, close doors,
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Work 368
Resident has right to refuse to perform services for the facility,
Perform services if she wants (housekeeping, laundry, meal preparation),
Document need or desire to work in the plan of care,
Specify if services performed are paid or voluntary,
Rate must be at prevailing rate, laundry
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Mail 369
Right to send and promptly receive mail that is unopened; and
Have access to stationery, postage, and writing implements at the resident’s own expense.
Deliver mail within 24 hours of delivery by us post office,
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Access and Visitation 370
The resident has the right and the facility must provide immediate access to any resident by the following,
immediate family or other relatives of the resident,
others who are visiting with the consent of the resident.
Resident can withdrawal consent at any time,
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Personal Property 371
Right to retain and use personal possessions,
Including some furnishings, and appropriate clothing, as space permits,
Unless to do so would infringe upon the rights or health and safety of other residents,
Surveyor will look to see if residents are encouraged to have and use personal items,
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Married Couples 372
Resident has the right to share a room with his or her spouse,
When married residents live in the same facility,
And both spouses consent to the arrangement.
If there is a room available,
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Admission, Transfers, Discharge
Transfer means outside of the facility,Purpose to restrict transfer by facility-to prevent
dumping of high care or difficult residents (373),Only when initiated by the facility not the patient,May not transfer or discharge a resident unless
necessary to meet their welfare,Appropriate because no longer needs the
services provided (374),Safety or health of individuals in facility is
endangered,
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Admission, Transfers, Discharge
Must document these in the medical record,
Must notify resident and family members and document reasons,
30 days notice with exceptions,endangerment to others, condition improved, urgent medical needs to be transferred,
Not a resident for 30 days,
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Payment of Care 375
Resident has failed to pay for care after reasonable notice,
If eligible for Medicare after admission, may only charge allowable rate,
Must provide notice to the patient and document reason in MR (377),
Must be made within 30 days before resident is transferred, unless safety or health of individuals would be in danger,
Need to document accurate assessments to address resident’s needs,
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Content of Notice 370
The reason for transfer or discharge; (The effective date of transfer or discharge; location to which the resident is transferred or
discharged; A statement that the resident has the right to
appeal the action to the State; The name, address and telephone number of the
State LTC ombudsman; For nursing facility residents with DD the mailing
address and telephone number of the agency responsible for the protection and advocacy of MR/DR individuals established under Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of Rights Act; and
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Content of Notice 370
For nursing facility residents who are mentally ill, the mailing address and telephone number of the agency responsible for the protection and advocacy of mentally ill individuals established under the Protection and Advocacy for Mentally Ill Individuals Act.
Must provide sufficient preparation and orientation to residents so they know where they are going and have safe transportation (380),
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Resident Behavior-Restraints
Right to be free from restraints (381),Both physical and chemical,Must do assessment and care planning,Never used for discipline or convenience,Need to have process of assessment and
evaluation before restraints used,Include in the plan of care,
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Abuse 382
Right to be free from verbal, sexual, physical, and mental abuse,
Free from involuntary seclusion,Defines each of these,Must have written policies that prohibit neglect, and
abuse and mistreatment,include the definitions of each in your policy,Will review any records of abuse,Need P&P that prohibit mistreatment, neglect, and
abuse and misappropriation of resident property,
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Hiring of Employees 384
Not hire if found guilty of abusing, neglecting, or mistreating residents by a court of law,
Or entered into state NA registry for this,Report any alleged violation involving neglect or
abuse, or misappropriation of property to administrator and to other officials as required by state law,
Must investigate,Should check all references,
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Surveyor will look at…. 384
Was relevant documentation reviewed and preserved (e.g., dated dressing which was not changed when treatment recorded change)?
Was the alleged victim examined promptly (if injury was suspected) and the finding documented in the report?
What steps were taken to protect the alleged victim from further abuse (particularly where no suspect has been identified)?
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Surveyor Will Look At (continued)
What actions were taken as a result of the investigation?
What corrective action was taken, including informing the nurse aide registry, State licensure authorities, and other agencies (e.g., LTC ombudsman; adult protective services; Medicaid fraud and abuse unit)?
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Quality of Life
Must care for residents in way that promotes quality of life,
Have activities directed by qualified person,
Qualified occupational therapist,Must provide social services to attain
physical, mental and psychosocial well being,
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Activities 385
Facility must provide for an ongoing program of activities designed the interests and the physical, mental, and psychosocial well-being of each resident.
Activities program by a qualified therapeutic recreation specialist or activity professional who is licensed or registered by state,
Or 2 yr experience on social or recreational program within the last 5 years, or
Is qualified OT or OT assistant, Or had completed training by the state,
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Activities 385
Surveyor will observe individual and group activity,
Long list of things under the survey procedures on this one,
What activities are planned, Outcomes and responses, Included in care plans based on
resident’s assessment, Adequate supplies,
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Social Services 386
Facility must provide medically-related social services to attain or maintain the highest practicable physical, mental, and psychosocial well-being of each resident,
with more than 120 beds must employ a qualified social worker on a full-time basis.
Need bachelor’s degree in social work or human services field (psychology, rehab counseling, etc.) and 1 year supervised social work experience in health care setting,
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Social Services 386
Making arrangements for obtaining needed adaptive equipment, clothing, and personal items;
Maintaining contact with family (with resident’s permission) to report on changes in health, current goals, discharge planning, and encouragement to participate in care planning;
Assisting staff to inform residents and those they designate about the resident’s health status and health care choices;
Making referrals and obtaining services from outside entities (e.g., talking books, absentee ballots, community wheelchair transportation);
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Social Services (continued) 386
Assisting residents with financial and legal matters (e.g., applying for pensions, referrals to lawyers, referrals to funeral homes for preplanning arrangements);
Discharge planning services (e.g., helping to place a resident on a waiting list for community congregate living, arranging intake for home care services for residents returning home, assisting with transfer arrangements to other facilities);
Providing or arranging provision of needed counseling services;
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Resident Assessments 388
Conduct initial and periodic and reproducible assessments of each resident’s functional capacity, and includes;Identification and demographic information. Customary routine. Cognitive patterns. Communication. Vision. Mood and behavior patterns. Psychosocial well-being.
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Resident Assessments 388
Physical functioning and structural problems.
Continence. Disease diagnoses and health
conditions. Dental and nutritional status. Skin condition. Activity pursuit. Medications
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Resident Assessments 388
Special treatments and procedures. Discharge potential. Documentation of summary information
regarding the additional assessment performed through the resident assessment protocols.
Documentation of participation in assessment.
Must do direct observation and communicate with resident and licensed members on all shifts,
Intent to do this to develop care plan,
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Assessments
Assessment within 14 days after admission,Assessment if significant change (390),Excludes readmissions if no significant change in
condition (389),Very detailed information on what constitutes a
significant change (394),Must have a comprehensive care plan (395),Care plan must include measurable objectives to
met patient’s needs,
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Care Plans 395
Interdisciplinary team should develop objectives to attain highest level of functioning,
Document if patient refuses something staff feel would help,
Care plan must be developed within 7 days after comprehensive assessment done,
Prepared by interdisciplinary team that includes doctor, RN with responsibility for resident, resident and family,
Review and revise as necessary,
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Care Plan 395
Did an occupational therapist design needed adaptive equipment or a speech therapist provide techniques to improve swallowing ability?
Do the dietitian and the speech therapist determine, for example, the optimum textures and consistency for the resident’s food that provide both a nutritionally adequate diet and effectively use oropharyngeal capabilities of the resident,
Does staff make an effort to schedule care plan meetings at the best time of the day for residents and their families?
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Service Provided 397
Services provided must meet the standard of care,
Make sure person providing care are qualified,
Are residents with acute conditions promptly hospitalized, as appropriate?
Are there errors in medication administration?
Make sure they follow the care plan (399),
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Discharge Summary 399
Resident must have a discharge summary that includes; Recapitulation of the resident’s stay,Final summary of the resident’s status,A post-discharge plan of care that is developed with the participation of the resident and his or her family, which will assist the resident to adjust to his or her new living environment.
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Nutrition 400
The facility must ensure that a resident;Maintains acceptable parameters of
nutritional status, such as body weight and protein levels,
unless the resident’s clinical condition demonstrates that this is not possible,
Unacceptable parameters include unplanned weight loss, peripheral edema, cachexia and laboratory tests indicating malnourishment (e.g., serum albumin levels).
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Nutrition 401
Suggested parameters for evaluating significance of unplanned and undesired weight loss are:
See detailed information under 401,
Interval Significant Loss
Severe Loss
1 month 5% Greater than 5%
3 months 7.5% Greater than 7.5%
6 months 10% Greater than 10%
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Suggested Laboratory Values
Albumin >60 yr.: 3.4 - 4.8 g/dl (good for examining marginal protein depletion),
Plasma Transferrin >60 yr.:180 - 380 g/dl. (Rises with iron deficiency anemia. More persistent indicator of protein status.),
Hemoglobin 14-17 males and 12-15 females, Hemocrit males 41-53, females 36-46, K+ 3.5-5.0, Mg+ 1.3-2.0,
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Rehab Services 402
If specialized rehabilitative services such as, but not limited to,
physical therapy, speech-language pathology, occupational therapy, and mental health rehabilitative services for mental illness and mental retardation, are required in the resident’s comprehensive plan of care,
Facility must provide the required service,
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Rehab Services (continued) 402
Need physician order (403)May get from outside source,No fee can be charged a Medicaid
recipient for specialized rehabilitative services because they are covered facility services.
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Occupational Therapy 402
What did the facility do to decrease the amount of assistance needed to perform a task?
What did the facility do to decrease behavioral symptoms?
What did the facility do to improve gross and fine motor coordination?
What did the facility do to improve sensory awareness, visual-spatial awareness, and body integration?
What did the facility do to improve memory, problem solving, attention span, and the ability to recognize safety hazards?
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Speech, Language Pathology What did the facility do to improve auditory
comprehension? What did the facility do to improve speech
production and expressive behavior? What did the facility do to improve the
functional abilities of residents with moderate to severe hearing loss who have received an audiology evaluation?
For the resident who cannot speak, did the facility assess for a communication board or an alternate means of communication?
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Dental Services 404The facility must assist residents in
obtaining routine and 24-hour emergency dental care.
This requirement makes the facility directly responsible for the dental care needs of its residents.
The facility must ensure that a dentist is available for residents,
Make appt and arrange transportation (408), Can’t charge Medicaid patients, For Medicare and private pay can impose
additional charge,
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AHA Website on CAH
www.aha.org/memberRelations/cah.aspProvides updates,Directory of resources,Federal legislation,Growth of the program,Grants,State hospital association links,
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Statement of Deficiencies and Plan of corrections,
Based on documentation of surveyor worksheet or notes and form CMS-2567,
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The End Questions?????
Sue Dill Calloway RN, Esq. CPHRMAD, BA, BSN, MSN, JDPresidentAttorney at Law614 791-1468 sdill1@columbus.rr.com
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The End
Are you up to the challenge??
See additional resources including patient safety resources,
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Websites
Tools and Resources Rural Health Resource Center at http://www.ruralcenter.org/tasc/
American Association for Respiratory Care AARC- www.aarc.org,
American College of Surgeons ACS-www.facs.org,
American Nurses Association ANA- www.ana.org
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Websites
Center for Disease Control CDC – www.cdc.gov,
Food and Drug Administration- www.fda.gov,Association of periOperative Registered
Nurses at AORN- www.aorn.org,American Institute of Architects AIA-
www.aia.org,Occupational Safety and Health Administration
OSHA – www.osha.gov,National Institutes of Health NIH-www.nih.gov,
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Websites
United States Dept of Agriculture USDA- www.usda.gov,
Emergency Nurses Association ENA- www.ena.org,
American College of Emergency Physicians ACEP- www.acep.org,
Joint Commission Joint Commission- www.JointCommission.org,
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services CMS- www.cms.hhs.gov,
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Websites
American Association for Respiratory Care AARC- www.aarc.org,
American College of Surgeons ACS-www.facs.org,
American Nurses Association ANA- www.ana.org,
AHRQ is www.ahrq.gov,
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Websites
American Hospital Association AHA- www.aha.org,
CMS Life Safety Code page - http://new.cms.hhs.gov/CFCsAndCoPs/07_LSC.asp,
COPs available in word and PDR at http://www.access.gpo.gov/nara/cfr/waisidx_04/42cfr485_04.html,
American College of Radiology- www.acr.org,
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Websites
Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA)- www.fema.gov,
Drug Enforcement Administration –www.dea.gov (copy of controlled substance act),
US Pharmacopeia- www.usp.org, (USP 797 book for sale),
Rural Assistance Center or RAC at http://www.raconline.org/
CAH seminar Oct 2007 handouts at http://www.nrharural.org/conferences/sub/CAH.html
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Websites
National Patient Safety Foundation at the AMA-www.ama-assn.org/med-sci/npsf/htm,
The Institute for Safe Medication Practices- www.ismp.org
U.S. Pharmacopeia (USP) Convention, Inc.-www.usp.org
U.S. Food and Drug Administration MedWatch-www.fda.gov/medwatch
Institute for Healthcare Improvement- www.ihi.org, AHRQ at www.ahrq.gov, Sentinel event alerts at www.jointcommission.org,
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Websites
American Pharmaceutical Association- www.aphanet.org
American Society of Heath-System Pharmacists-www.ashp.org
Enhancing Patient Safety and Errors in Healthcare-www.mederrors.com
National Coordinating Council for Medication Error Reporting and Prevention-www.nccmerp.org,
FDA's Recalls, Market Withdrawals and Safety Alerts Page: http://www.fda.gov/opacom/7alerts.html
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Infection Control Websites
Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology (APIC) infection control guidelines at www.apic.org,
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention- www.cdc.gov,
Occupational Health and Safety Administration (OSHA) at www.osha.gov,
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health NIOSH at www.cdc.gov/niosh/homepage.html,
AORN at www.aorn.org, Society for Healthcare Epidemiology of America
(SHEA) at www.shea-online.org,
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www.flexmonitoring.org/links.shtml
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Helpful Websites
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Federal Office of Rural Health Policy
Federal Office or Rural Health Policy
Room 9A-55
5600 Fishers Lane
Rockville, MD 20857
301 443-0835
301 443-2803 fax
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Office of Rural Health Policy
Advises DHHS on matters affecting rural hospitals,
Has resources for CAH,Furnishes selected articles, Articles on rural issues on their web sitehttp://www.ruralhealth.hrsa.gov/index.htm
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Physical Environment
How do you provide emergency power?Can emergency generator provide power for
emergency equipment and lighting,Review maintenance records and policies of test
runs and how often on emergency equipment,
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Resources
AHRQ published patient safety primer in 2008 that is designed to help users to understand key concepts in patient safety at http://psnet.ahrq.gov/primerHome.aspx,
TeamSTEPPS is a teamwork system with tons of free resources on this at http://teamstepps.ahrq.gov/
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AHRQ Website http://www.ahrq.gov/qual/
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IHI Website www.ihi.org/ihi
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SafetyLeaders.org Website
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AHA Quality Center http://www.ahaqualitycenter.org/ahaqualitycenter/jsp/home.jsp
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NQF Safe Practices 2010 Edition www.qualityforum.org
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NCP VA National Safety for Patient Safety
Has multiple resources available at www.patientsafety.gov/bravo.htmTIPS Newsletter - topics concerning patient safety, NCPS Patient Safety Handbook developed by the National Center for Patient Safety, Fall incident report by Morse Fall Scale and tools for falls,Patient elopement tools,Medication tips,
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AHRQ
Medical Error and Patient Safety at http://www.ahrq.gov/qual/errorsix.htm, Web M&M, Mortality and Morbidity Monthly, at http://www.webmm.ahrq.gov/,
PSNet, AHRQ Patient Safety Network, http://psnet.ahrq.gov/, contains articles on medication errors and other patient safety issues that come out,
Are you signed up to get this? You can browse under medication errors/ADE topic.(866 articles)
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ISMP
Institute for Safe Medication Practice is a rich source of information,
www.ismp.org, Has medication tools and resources, Has high alert list, self assessment tools Error prone abbreviation, FDA MedWatch, Confused drug name list, anticoagulant safety, Sign up nurses for free newsletter via email called
Nurse Advise-ERR at https://www.ismp.org/orderforms/adviseERRsubscription.asp
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USP US Pharmacopeia Good source of information and have
the MEDMARX program, Have drug error finder for LASA, Revises heparin monograph at
http://www.usp.org/hottopics/heparin.html?hlc.
Has newletters at http://www.usp.org/aboutUSP/newsletter.html
Has USP email notices –monthly updates,
www.usp.org
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CAPSlink
Every hospital should have someone on
their medication management team to get this publication,
It is available at no charge, Includes data from MEDMARX and Medication
error reporting program, Guidelines from different organizations, Recommendations for problem prone error
issues, At http://www.usp.org/hqi/practitionerPrograms/newsletters/capsLink/
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Sign Up for FDA Alerts
Sign up to get safety alerts from FDA, At http://www.fda.gov/opacom/7alerts.html Example; Advil and ASA taken together- if heart
patient takes ASA 81 mg for heart- ibuprofen can interfere with anti-platelet effect,
Take 30 minutes or longer, Minimal risk with occasional use, Lots of information on medications! See also Drug Safety newsletter at
http://www.fda.gov/cder/dsn/2008_winter/2008_winter.pdf
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FDA Patient Safety News 2008
Mixups between insulin U-100 and U-500 which occurred when selecting from computer screens,
Severe pain, muscle or joint pain, with osteoporosis drug with bisphosphate drugs such as Fosamax, Actonel, Boniva, and Reclast,
More patients die with luer misconnections,Deaths from Fentanyl patches continue, http://www.accessdata.fda.gov/scripts/cdrh/cfdocs/psn/index.cfm
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IHI Institute for Healthcare Improvement
Excellent source of resources for patient safety and quality resources, toolkits, how to kits,
Prevent ADEs by implementing medication reconciliation,
Reduce harm from high alert medications,Reduce MRSA infections,Many resources related to medication
issues, At www.ihi.org,
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Leapfrog
Represents half a million Americans by corporations that purchase health insurance,
Rewards for improving safety and quality,Aims CPOE, 27 procedures to preventing
medical errors, high risk treatments, ICU staffing with intensivists
If 3 followed would prevent 907,600 medication errors, 65,341 lives and $41 billion dollars a year!
www.leapfroggroup.org
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National Quality Forum30 Safe Practices published in October, 2006,34 Safe Practices Update 2009, Includes CPOE, unit dose, anticoagulant
therapy, culture of safety, standardize labeling and storage of medication, identification of high alert medications, medication reconciliation,
Chapter 6 was on Medication Management,
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Culture SP 1
Information Management & Continuity of Care
Medication Management
Hospital Acquired Infections
Condition- & Site-Specific Practices
Consent & Disclosure
Wrong-siteSx Prevention
Periop. MIPrevention
Press. Ulcer Prevention
DVT/VTE Prevention
Anticoag. Therapy
Asp. + VAP Prevention
Central V. CathBSI Prevention
Sx Site Inf.Prevention
Contrast Media Use
Hand HygieneInfluenza
Prevention
PharmacistCentral Role
Med Recon.
Std. Med Labeling & Pkg
High AlertMeds
Unit DoseMedications
Evidence-Based Ref.
Culture
CPOE
OrderRead-back
Abbreviations Discharge
System
CriticalCare Info.
LabelingStudies
Culture Meas.,F.B., & Interv.
Structures& Systems
ID Mitigation Risk & Hazards
Team Training& Team Interv.CHAPTER 1: Background
Summary, and Set of Safe Practices
CHAPTERS 2-8 : Practices By Subject
Nursing Workforce
ICU CareDirect
Caregivers
Workforce CHAPTER 4: Workforce• Nursing Workforce• Direct Caregivers• ICU Care
CHAPTER 2: Creating and Sustaining a Culture of Patient Safety
• Leadership Structures & Systems• Culture Measurement, Feedback and Interventions• Teamwork Training and Team Interventions• Identification and Mitigation of Risks and Hazards
CHAPTER 5: Information Management & Continuity of Care
• Critical Care Information• Order Read-back• Labeling Studies• Discharge Systems• Safe Adoption of Integrated Clinical Systems
including CPOE• Abbreviations
CHAPTER 6: Medication Management• Medication Reconciliation• Pharmacist Role• Standardized Medication Labeling & Packaging• High-Alert Medications• Unit-Dose Medications
CHAPTER 7: Hospital-Acquired Infections• Prevention of Aspiration and Ventilator-
Associated Pneumonia • Central Venous Catheter-Related Blood Stream
Infection Prevention • Surgical Site Infection Prevention• Hand Hygiene• Influenza Prevention
CHAPTER 8:• Evidence-Based Referrals• Wrong-Site, Wrong Procedure, Wrong Person
Surgery Prevention • Perioperative Myocardial Infarct/Ischemia
Prevention• Pressure Ulcer Prevention• DVT/VTE Prevention • Anticoagulation Therapy• Contrast Media-Induced Renal Failure Prevention
Informed Consent
Life-Sustaining Treatment
Disclosure
CHAPTER 3: Informed Consent & Disclosure• Informed Consent• Life-Sustaining Treatment• Disclosure
Consent & Disclosure
CHAPTER 6: Medication Management• Pharmacist Role• Medication Reconciliation• High-Alert Medications• Standardized Medication Labeling & Packaging• Unit-Dose Medications
2007 NQF Report
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Pa Patient Safety Authority www.psa.state.pa.us/psa/site/default.asp
177
Federal Office of Rural Health Policy
Federal Office or Rural Health Policy
Room 9A-55
5600 Fishers Lane
Rockville, MD 20857
301 443-0835
301 443-2803 fax
178
Office of Rural Health Policy
Advises DHHS on matters affecting rural hospitals,
Has resources for CAH,Furnishes selected articles, Articles on rural issues on their web sitehttp://www.ruralhealth.hrsa.gov/index.htm
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